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      Long non-coding RNA ANRIL knockdown suppresses apoptosis and pro-inflammatory cytokines while enhancing neurite outgrowth via binding microRNA-125a in a cellular model of Alzheimer's disease

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          Abstract

          The present study aimed to investigate the effect of the long non-coding RNA antisense non-coding RNA in the INK4 locus (lnc-ANRIL) knockdown on apoptosis, neurite outgrowth and inflammation based on a PC12 cellular Alzheimer's disease (AD) model. A cellular AD model was constructed by treating nerve growth factor stimulated PC12 cells with amyloid β (Aβ) 1–42 and then control knockdown plasmid and lnc-ANRIL knockdown plasmid were transfected in the PC12 cellular AD model as the KD- negative control (NC) group or the AD-ANRIL group respectively. Apoptosis, neurite outgrowth, pro-inflammatory cytokines and microRNA (miR)-125a were assessed. Rescue experiments were conducted by transfecting lnc-ANRIL knockdown plasmid and lnc-ANRIL knockdown plasmid and miR-125a inhibitor in the PC12 cellular AD model as the KD-ANRIL group or KD-ANRIL + KD-miR-125a group respectively. Following transfection, cell apoptosis deccreased while neurite outgrowth increased in the KD-ANRIL group compared with the KD-NC group (all P<0.01). Concerning inflammation, tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6 and IL-17 were decreased in the KD-ANRIL group compared with the KD-NC group (all P<0.01). miR-125a was negatively regulated by lnc-ANRIL and therefore rescue experiments were subsequently conducted. In the rescue experiments, cell apoptosis was increased while total neurite outgrowth was inhibited in the KD-ANRIL + KD-miR-125a group compared with the KD-ANRIL group (all P<0.01), and TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6 and IL-17 were increased in the KD-ANRIL + KD-miR-125a group compared with the KD-ANRIL group (all P<0.01). A luciferase reporter assay demonstrated that lnc-ANRIL directly bound miR-125a. lnc-ANRIL knockdown suppressed cell apoptosis and inflammation while promoting neurite outgrowth via binding of miR-125a in AD.

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          The overlap between vascular disease and Alzheimer’s disease – lessons from pathology

          Recent epidemiological and clinico-pathological data indicate considerable overlap between cerebrovascular disease (CVD) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and suggest additive or synergistic effects of both pathologies on cognitive decline. The most frequent vascular pathologies in the aging brain and in AD are cerebral amyloid angiopathy and small vessel disease. Up to 84% of aged subjects show morphological substrates of CVD in addition to AD pathology. AD brains with minor CVD, similar to pure vascular dementia, show subcortical vascular lesions in about two-thirds, while in mixed type dementia (AD plus vascular dementia), multiple larger infarcts are more frequent. Small infarcts in patients with full-blown AD have no impact on cognitive decline but are overwhelmed by the severity of Alzheimer pathology, while in early stages of AD, cerebrovascular lesions may influence and promote cognitive impairment, lowering the threshold for clinically overt dementia. Further studies are warranted to elucidate the many hitherto unanswered questions regarding the overlap between CVD and AD as well as the impact of both CVD and AD pathologies on the development and progression of dementia.
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            The Alzheimer’s Disease Clinical Spectrum

            Alzheimer's disease (AD) care requires timely diagnosis and multidisciplinary management. Evaluation involves structured patient and caregiver history and symptom-function reviews, examination, and testing (laboratory and neuroimaging) to delineate impairment level, determine the cognitive-behavioral syndrome, and diagnose cause. Clinical biomarkers are available to aid high confidence in etiologic diagnosis. Management uses psychoeducation, shared goal setting, and patient-caregiver dyad decision making. When combined, pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic therapies mitigate symptoms and reduce clinical progression and care burden. AD biopathologic processes develop over decades before symptoms manifest; this period is increasingly targeted in research as an opportunity to best delay or prevent AD dementia.
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              Circulating exosomal miR-125a-3p as a novel biomarker for early-stage colon cancer

              Circulating exosome holds great potentials as biomarker for diagnosis and prognosis of human cancers. Previously, we have applied small RNA sequencing to identify aberrantly expressed exosomal miRNAs as candidates for diagnostic markers in colon cancer patients. In this validation cohort, plasma derived exosomal miRNA was isolated from 50 early-stage colon cancer patients and 50 matched healthy volunteers. Real-time qRT-PCR revealed that miR-125a-3p, miR-320c were significantly up-regulated in plasma exosomes of the patients with early stage colon cancer. ROC curve showed that miR-125a-3p abundant level may predict colon cancer with an area of under the curve (AUC) of 68.5%, in comparison to that of CEA at 83.6%. Combination of miR-125a-3P and CEA improved the AUC to 85.5%. In addition, plasma exosome level of miR-125a-3p and miR-320c showed significant correlation with nerve infiltration (P   0.05). On the contrary, plasma CEA level is correlated with tumor size, infiltration depth, and differentiation degree (P < 0.05, r = 0.3009–0.7270), but not with nerve infiltration (P = 0.744). In conclusion, this follow-up study demonstrated circulating plasma exosomal miR-125a-3p is readily accessible as diagnosis biomarker for early-stage colon cancer. When combined with conventional diagnostic markers, miR-125a-3p can improve the diagnostic power.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Mol Med Rep
                Mol Med Rep
                Molecular Medicine Reports
                D.A. Spandidos
                1791-2997
                1791-3004
                August 2020
                02 June 2020
                02 June 2020
                : 22
                : 2
                : 1489-1497
                Affiliations
                Department of Neurology, Wuhan No.1 Hospital, Wuhan, Hubei 430022, P.R. China
                Author notes
                Correspondence to: Dr Wei Shao, Department of Neurology, Wuhan No.1 Hospital, 215 Zhongshan Avenue, Wuhan, Hubei 430022, P.R. China, E-mail: laotuishan8hy@ 123456163.com
                Article
                MMR-22-02-1489
                10.3892/mmr.2020.11203
                7339647
                32626959
                05a490ec-a4d8-4add-ad50-62bc833a3242
                Copyright: © Zhou et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.

                History
                : 19 November 2019
                : 28 April 2020
                Categories
                Articles

                alzheimer's disease,apoptosis,inflammation,long non-coding rna in the ink4 locus,microrna-125a,neurite outgrowth

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